Cognitive Psych Chapter 5
Funahashi and Stokes both focused on which concept relating to memory? a. delay b. rotation c. decay d. imagery
delay
working memory and the PFC
delayed-response task- a function in which information is provided, a time gap is imposed and then memory is tested oculomotor delayed-response task -neurons continue firing during the delay so information remains available in WM WM involves physiological processes that extend beyond the PFC
preservation
difficulty in switching from one behavior to another repeatedly preforming the same action or thought even if it is not achieving the desired goal -patients with frontal lobe damage
Iconic memory is to echoic memory as _____ is to _____. a. sound; vision b. vision; sound c. short-term memory; long-term memory d. long-term memory; short-term memory
vision; sound
When you're trying to understand what your professor is talking about in a lecture, which of the following is LEAST important to aid this process? a. phonological loop b. phonological store c. articulatory rehearsal d. visuospatial sketch pad
visuospatial sketch pad
Suppose someone has told you a phone number, and you're repeating it over and over again to yourself with the hope that you'll remember it before you dial the number. This example is a type of a ___ called ___. a. report method; rehearsal b. control process; rehearsal c. control process; chunking d. report method; chunking
control process; rehearsal
When you go to the movies, how many distinct stimuli are being registered by your sensory memory each second? a. 7 b. 12 c. 24 d. 96
24
Modal Model of Memory
(Atkinson and Shiffrin 1968) the theory that individuals process information through a series of stages structural features: sensory memory, short-term memory, long-term memory control processes
episodic buffer
(added in 2000) the "backup" store communicates with both long-term memory and the components of working memory. mechanism of memory that can store information, thereby increasing capacity holds information temporarily, responsible for our conscious awareness
Suppose you're shown five rows containing five letters each. You're then told to recall only one row of letters. In doing so, you're utilizing ___. a. persistence of vision b. the whole report method c. the delayed partial report method d. the partial report method
the partial report method
What is a key function of the phonological loop? a. to fire neurons b. to increase capacity c. to rotate images d. to prevent decay
to prevent decay
mental rotation
turning of an image of an object in the mind
Which of the following terms does NOT reflect Baddeley and Hitch's concept of working memory? a. visual b. unlimited c. temporary d. proactive
unlimited
Which of the following student names is least likely to be remembered by a substitute teacher? a. Prab Banerjee b. Carlos Ortiz c. James Fontana d. Ekaterina Kornikova
Ekaterina Kornikova
___ has helped to bolster the idea that the ___ is important for holding information for brief periods of time. a. Episodic buffering; parietal lobe b. Episodic buffering; prefrontal cortex c. The delayed-response task; parietal lobe d. The delayed-response task; prefrontal cortex
The delayed-response task; prefrontal cortex
phonological store
component that holds a limited amount of verbal and auditory information for a few seconds.
If memory can be seen as a crowded city, what is the central executive? a. a main street b. a bus dispatcher c. a taxi driver d. a subway car
a bus dispatcher
chunk
a collection of elements strongly associated with one another but weakly associated with elements of other chunks
Which of the following will likely NOT advance beyond sensory memory? a. a song lyric b. a shopping list c. a firefly's glow d. a friend's greeting
a firefly's glow
Currently, it is generally believed that the upper limit for short-term memory is ___. a. limitless b. 7 plus or minus 2 items c. between 10 and14 items d. about 4 items
about 4 items
Which of the following has the shortest rate of decay? a. an exit sign b. a finger snap c. a trumpet note d. an opera aria
an exit sign
According to the activity-silent working memory model, neurons fire ________. a. at remembering and the synaptic state b. only at stimulus input c. at stimulus input and remembering d. only at remembering
at stimulus input and remembering
According to Baddeley, the central executive controls ________. a. sensation b. attention c. rotation d. perseveration
attention
prefrontal cortex
attentional control, switching tasks, planning, personality, organization
Which of the following will most engage the visuospatial sketch pad? a. painting a wall b. doing a jigsaw puzzle c. building a birdhouse d. writing a sentence
building a birdhouse
long-term memory
can hold a large amount of information for years or even decades
Daneman and Carpenter's research on reading span looked at differences in memory ________ among individuals. a. structure b. capacity c. buffering d. rehearsal
capacity
activity-silent working memory
changes in connectivity which last only a few seconds
the effect of damage to the prefrontal cortex
changes in personality, planning, social skills, etc. -Phineas Cage- large iron rod straight through head damaging his PFC performance drops to chance level after removing the PFC -monkeys without a prefrontal cortex have difficulty holding information in working memory
By listing numbers as (212) 555-1234, telephone companies use which technique to help people remember their own and others' phone numbers? a. mental rotation b. chunking c. digit span d. phonological similarity
chunking
What distinguishes working memory from short-term memory? a. location b. stimuli c. speed d. complexity
complexity
Which of the following likely led early telephone companies to create phone numbers using the format 213-555-1234 rather than a format such as 21776-551873-0633295? a. phonological similarity b. digit span c. articulatory rehearsal d. chunking
digit span
Remembering a fun family trip to the beach when you were six years old requires recalling a(n) ________ memory from ________ memory. a. semantic; procedural b. procedural; episodic c. episodic; long-term d. semantic; working
episodic; long-term
If someone is showing perseveration, then they've likely had damage to the ___ lobe of the brain. a. frontal b. parietal c. temporal d. occipital
frontal
short-term memory
holds five to seven items for about 15 to 20 seconds includes both new information received from the sensory stores and information recalled from long-term memory capacity of STM up to 4 items
digit span
how many digits a person can remember george millers magic number (7 + or - 2) 5-9 items
change detection
identifying differences between pictures or displays that are presented one after another
articulatory suppression
inference wit memory by repetition of an irrelevant word during tasks requiring the phonological loop speaking prevents one from rehearsing items to be remembered -reduces memory span -eliminates word length effect
sensory memory
initial stage that holds information for seconds or fractions of a second -relatively high capacity but a fast-decaying store of sensory information George Sterling's experiment -iconic memory, echoic memory
working memory
limited capacity system for temporary storage and manipulation of information for complex tasks such as comprehension, learning, and reasoning the entire brain is important for WM similar concept to STM (how they differ- STM holds info for a brief period of time, wm is concerned with the storage, processing, and manipulation of info and is active during complex cognition) set up to process different types of info simultaneously. has trouble when similar types of info are presented at the same time added component: episodic buffer
reading span
measure used to determine individual differences in working memory. it is the number if 13-16 word sentences that a person can read and then correctly remember the last words of all of the sentences reading span test-tests reading span
George Sterling's Experiment (1960)
measuring the capacity and duration of sensory memory -an array of letters flashed quickly on a screen (50 ms) -participants were asked to report as many as possible whole report method, partial report method, delayed partial report done on the properties of a visual icon: sensory memory of an image
control processes
mechanisms governable by a person and that may differ from one task to another -rehearsal (elaborative vs maintenance) -strategies used to make a stimulus more memorable -strategies of attention that help you focus on specific stimuli
word length effect
memory for lists of words is better for short words than for long words takes longer to rehearse long words and to produce them during recall
the central executive
part of the working memory that coordinates the activity if the other components acts as the attention controller/coordinator -focus, divide, switch attention preservation
visuospatial sketchpad
part of the working memory that holds and processes pictures and dimensions
phonological loop
part of the working memory that holds and processes verbal and auditory information
partial report method
participants heard tone which told them which row of letters to report (high tone-first row, medium tone-middle row, low tone-last row) average 3.3 out of 4 letters (82%) participants could report any of the rows
whole method report
participants were required to report all of the stimuli they saw in a brief presentation average 4.5 out of 12 letters (37.5%)
Which of the following will present the greatest challenge for storing in short-term memory? a. yellow cubes b. colored circles c. striped boxes d. plaid polygons
plaid polygons
delayed partial report method
presentation of a tone delayed for a fraction of a second after the letters were extinguished -performance decreases rapidly
articulatory rehearsal process
procedure involved in working memory that keeps items in the phonological store from decaying
decay
process by which information is lost from memory due to the passage of time
recall
process in which subjects are asked to report stimuli they have previously seen or heard
rehearsal
process of repeating a stimulus over and over, usually for the purpose of remembering it. takes place in short-term memory
memory
processes involved in retaining, retrieving, and using information about stimuli, images, events, ideas, and skills after the original information is no longer present active any time some past experience has an impact on how you think or behave now or in the future
phonological similarity affect
reaction that occurs when letters or words that sound similar are confused
visual imagery
the creation of visual images in the mind in the absence of a physical visual stimulus
While taking this quiz, you are relying on which of the following? a. iconic memory b. sensory memory c. executive memory d. semantic memory
semantic memory
The trail left by a moving sparkler is an example of the ___ at work. a. short-term memory b. long-term memory c. sensory memory d. visuospatial sketch pad
sensory memory
According to Broadbent, where does the process of rehearsal take place? a. central executive b. short-term memory c. working memory d. sensory memory
short-term memory
chunking
small units can be combined into larger meaningful units
According to the phonological similarity effect, we're more likely to confuse words or letters that ___ similar. For example, "F" is more likely to be misidentified as ___. a. sound; "E" b. sound; "S" c. look; "E" d. look; "P"
sound; "S"
echoic memory
stage of processing auditory stimuli lasting for a short time after a stimulus is extinguished responsible for persistence of sound about 2-3 seconds (longer than iconic)
iconic memory
stage of processing visual stimuli lasting for a short time after a stimulus is extinguished responsible for the persistence of vision- continued perception of light about 1/2-1 second example: sparkler
At this point in time, what is considered the primary function of the episodic buffer? a. controlling processes b. accelerating processes c. storing information d. sorting information
storing information
According to Stokes's model of activity-silent working memory, where is energy being directed during the silent state? a. axons b. synapses c. dendrites d. neurons
synapses